darcydodo: (bird)
darcydodo ([personal profile] darcydodo) wrote2005-03-30 09:19 am

Hee. Take my friend's excellent quiz!

52 of 100 vertebrates applaud your efforts! (amphibians/reptiles 59, birds 73, mammals 71)

Congratulations on hopping, slithering, flying, and charging through
three hundred and sixty million years of terrestrial vertebrate
evolution! If you did well, you may strut in front of your
herpetologist, ornithologist, and mammalogist friends like a kingsnake,
kingfisher, or kinkajou. (If you didn't do so well, perhaps a legless
lizard, yellow-bellied sapsucker, or least weasel would be more
appropriate.)



My test tracked 4 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:
You scored higher than 50% on vertebratesavvy
You scored higher than 50% on herpsavvy
You scored higher than 99% on birdsavvy
You scored higher than 99% on mammalsavvy
Link: The Terrestrial Vertebrates Test written by tigupine on Ok Cupid


I had this feeling that I was doing well on birds and mammals and... not so well on reptiles and amphibians. And I was right.
liv: ribbon diagram of a p53 monomer (p53)

[personal profile] liv 2005-03-30 06:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Those are hard! I did very well (>80%) on birds, ok-ish on mammals and fairly badly on reptiles and amphibians. So not too dissimilar to you, really.

[identity profile] fanlain.livejournal.com 2005-03-30 09:13 pm (UTC)(link)
oh that is just too cute!

Who needs physics after all?

[identity profile] zdamiana.livejournal.com 2005-03-31 12:57 am (UTC)(link)
I feel so vertebrate savvy! I scored better than 99% in all four categories!

I didn't feel like I was doing all that well, though. Maybe I was the first one in my age bracket to take the test, or something silly like that.

Otherwise, maybe it is time to go back to my old career aspiration of herpetologist.